1924 Biophysical Journal Volume 107 October

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "1924 Biophysical Journal Volume 107 October"

Transcription

1 194 Biophysical Journal Volume 107 October Article Ejecting Phage DNA against Cellular Turgor Pressure Sanjin Marion 1, * and Antonio Siber 1 1 Institute of Physics, Zagreb, Croatia ABSTRACT We examine in vivo ejection of noncondensed DNA from tailed bacteriophages into bacteria. The ejection is dominantly governed by the physical conditions in the bacteria. The confinement of the DNA in the virus capsid only slightly helps the ejection, becoming completely irrelevant during its last stages. A simple calculation based on the premise of condensed DNA in the cell enables us to estimate the maximal bacterial turgor pressure against which the ejection can still be fully realized. The calculated pressure (~5 atm) shows that the ejection of DNA into Gram-negative bacteria could proceed spontaneously, i.e., without the need to invoke active mechanisms. INTRODUCTION The explanation of all the relevant (thermodynamical) forces guiding the ejection of dsdna from tailed bacteriophages into bacterial cells, despite 50 years of research, is still missing (1,). The ejection starts as a release of DNA from the fully packed capsid (protein coating of the bacteriophage). The DNA is packed to extreme densities and exerts a pressure of atm on the capsid (3,4). Models developed and tested in vitro (see Ponchon et al. (1) and Molineux and Panja () and references therein) predict that the ejecting force resulting from even such a dense packing is insufficient to completely transfer the DNA into the cell interior. Although cells have smaller turgor pressures than fully packed bacteriophages, the ejecting force (and pressure) in the capsid drops sharply as it empties (5). A recent single-molecule Hershey-Chase experiment (6) hints that in vivo ejection is controlled not by the amount of DNA left inside the capsid but by the amount ejected into the cell. This means that once the pressure built-up in the bacteriophage is spent on the DNA ejection, a cellular mechanism takes over, e.g., as seen in vivo for T5 (7) and T7 (8). There have been various proposed mechanisms for completion of the ejection: nanomotors or enzymes that ratchet in the stalled part of the DNA (8,9); a solvent flow through the semipermeable capsid and into the cell, simultaneously flushing the DNA trough the tail (10); osmotic pressure from proteins remaining in the capsid (11); and diffusion of DNA with assisted pulling from proteins in the cell (1). It appears that none of these models give a definite answer; experiments suggest a coexistence of many different mechanisms. We propose a scenario sufficient to explain ejection into some Gram-negative bacteria based only on thermodynamic considerations of DNA in a noncondensed state in the capsid and in a condensed state in the cell. Models of DNA ejection based on the continuum theory by Ubbink and Odijk (13,14) have been applied to explain the ejection when both the ejected and encapsidated DNA are condensed (15). In the model by Tzlil et al. (15), the capsid DNA, being confined, has a nonoptimal shape that generates the force ejecting it from the capsid until the ejection force is balanced by an external counterforce. If this in vitro model is applied to in vivo cases, it predicts that ejection stalls if the cellular turgor pressure is larger than ~0.5 atm. Typical cellular pressures are estimated to be atm for Gram-negative (16 18) and 15 5 atm for Gram-positive bacteria (17). In our approach, we maintain the hypothesis that DNA is condensed in the cell due to the presence of multivalent cations during ejection (the concept of a condensate in the cell during ejection is not incompatible with a high reaction rate (19), and accordingly, a high DNA transcription rate after complete ejection). Typical in vitro experiments cannot obtain a clean separation between two (three) compartments, one in the virus (immersed in the extracellular fluid), and the other in the cell (0), which is a key feature of our model. The results obtained in vitro may thus have a limited applicability in the in vivo conditions. Condensing agents are found in some capsids, but this is not a general situation and has been related to reduced infectivity (1). Many viral capsids are permeable to small ions, so we expect intracapsid solvent conditions analogous to those in their exterior. Because typical extracellular fluids have no condensing agents in sufficient concentrations, DNA ejection into bacteria is expected to proceed from a noncondensed state. MODELING THE DNA Submitted April 8, 014, and accepted for publication September 5, 014. *Correspondence: smarion@ifs.hr Editor: Jason Kahn. The phage DNA is one long strand of total length L 0 and persistence length L p z 50 nm () able to move between two compartments with different thermodynamic Ó 014 by the Biophysical Society /14/10/194/6 $.00

2 Ejecting Phage DNA against Cellular Turgor Pressure 195 conditions the virus and the cell. It is thus partitioned in two pieces, one of length L inside the virus head and tail, and the other of length L 0 L in the cell. Assuming no attractive DNA-DNA interaction in the capsid (noncondensed DNA), the total force on the DNA will tend to eject it from the capsid. There are two major contributions to the free energy F cell of the DNA in the cell. Because of the presence of multivalent ions and osmolytes, the ejected DNA will condense. The shape of the condensate is a result of a competition between DNA-DNA attractions mediated by the cations and unfavorable effects of DNA bending. On the other side, the major contribution to the free energy inside the capsid comes from bacteriophage tail confinement, bending from the capsid confinement, and excluded volume interactions between DNA segments. Ubbink-Odijk model for condensed DNA in the cell The state of the DNA inside the cell is described following the outline by Tzlil et al. (15). The volume V of the condensed DNA is proportional to the contour length L of the DNA V ¼ A 0 (L 0 L), with A 0 as the area per unit length of DNA. The DNA condensate is treated in the Ubbink-Odijk model (13,14) with free energy F tor ¼ gv þ ss þ E bend consisting of: a negative (attractive) part proportional to the DNA volume gv, where g is an effective condensing pressure; a positive contribution proportional to the surface area ss, where s reflects a lack of DNA neighbors at the condensate surface; and a bending energy of k B TL p /R per unit length of a circular loop of DNA wound at a radius R. The total free energy F tor is minimal when the condensate has the shape of a torus (15), but there are other possibilities like rods (3). A different shape would only change the surface and bending energy terms to some degree. The DNA in the condensate is assumed to be hexagonally packed with the area per unit length of DNA A 0 ¼ pd0 = p ffiffiffiffiffi 1 the packing constant for hexagonally packed cylinders (15). Here d 0 z.8 nm is the experimentally determined closest separation between DNA strands with added condensing agents (15,4). We note that Tzlil et al. (15) model the surface free energy contribution by assuming the loss of one-half of DNA nearest neighbors, whereas we assume the loss of one-third of the nearest neighbors as derived by Ubbink and Odijk (13). This constitutes a minor correction to the surface free energy term, but may become important if used to determine model parameters from toroid shapes. The approximation adopted by Tzlil et al. (15) assumes the toroid to have the shape of a thin torus. In this regime, the bending energy can be approximated as if the whole length of DNA is wound at a (mean) distance R to the center. We calculate the free energy of the condensate as for a torus with major radius R as F tor ðl; RÞ ¼ ga 0 ðl L 0 Þþ 3 þ k BT ðl L 0 ÞL p ; R A 0 g d pffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffip ðl L 0 ÞA 0 and proceed with a variational approach. Minimizing Eq. 1 with respect to the major radius R yields optimal R, 3dLp 5ðL R ¼ p A 0 g ffiffiffiffiffiffiffi L0 Þ 1 5 ; () A 0 so that the minimal free energy of a toroidal condensate (15)is " # 1 A F tor ¼ e 0 ðl L 0 Þ 1 b 0 L 5 p ðl L d0e 4 0 Þ 5 ; (3) 0 where e 0 ¼ A 0 g is the condensation free energy per unit length in an ideally packed hexagonal lattice and b ¼ a constant. This e 0 was determined by Tzlil et al. (15) by fitting the toroid major axis to experimental data for l-dna in a solution of polylysine (3). Inasmuch as they chose a different surface term than that used by us and in the original model (14), the condensation free energy per unit length they obtain, g T, is smaller than ours, g UO. The shapes of toroids in the model of Ubbink-Odijk (14) are determined by a nondimensional parameter ffiffiffi R (1) a ¼ sv 1 3 d 0 L p ; (4) which depends on the choice of surface energy s. By using a different choice for the surface energy, the fits to toroid shapes would correspond to different values of the surface free energy s than in the original model. Because s is derived from g, we have that the Ubbink-Odijk model, adopted here also by us, has g UO ¼ 3/ g T ¼ 0.15 k B T/nm 3 (~6 atm). This difference arises solely from different treatment of the missing neighbors at the surface of the toroid (one-third missing in Ubbink and Odijk (14), g UO ~ 6 atm versus onehalf missing in Tzlil et al. (15), g T ~ 4 atm). An alternative approach to fitting is to obtain the condensing energy per unit length from osmotic force measurements (4), e.g., a 0 mm solution of Cobalt Hexamine corresponds to 0.04 k B T nm 3. The comparison of the two values obtained (0.15 k B T nm 3 vs k B T nm 3 ) shows that the thermodynamics of the condensed DNA importantly depends on the condensing agent. When most of the viral DNA is in the condensate, L << L 0, the surface and bending terms in Eq. 3 are negligible (15). This is because the largest contribution to the free energy of tori comes from the bulk term in F tor, as can be seen from 1 A 1:308 0 L 5 p d0 4e L 5 0 1: (5) 0

3 196 Marion and Siber Thus, the contributions of the surface and bending terms in the free energy are much smaller from the bulk contribution. To confirm the wider applicability of this statement, we performed a full minimization for toroids with different lengths of DNA, corresponding to different phage genomes. The minimization of free energy yielded the optimal shape together with the corresponding volume free energy F vol ¼ gv, surface free energy F surf ¼ ss, and the bending energy F bend. The optimal condensate shapes are shown in Fig. 1 with the corresponding energy contributions. We see that for all but the smallest phage, the correction to the turgor pressure that the phage can eject against, DP, is small. Excluded volume for two DNA rods in the capsid The dominant part of the excluded volume for two DNA molecules comes from screened electrostatic interactions. Due to its rigidity DNA behaves electrostatically as a long rod with a linear charge density. The interaction between two rods is obtained from the linearized Poisson-Boltzmann equation (Debye-Hückel). If the electrostatic screening length k and the DNA width are negligible with regard to the persistence length, then the interaction of two DNA rods that have their points of closest separation at r 1 and r, and a mutual angle of g between their directors n 1 and n, is given by (5,6) a b U 1 ðr 1 ; r Þ¼ pl ek e kjr 1 r j sin g ; (6) FIGURE 1 (a) Optimal DNA toroid shapes for several different lengths of DNA corresponding to well-known phages () (see text for details). Only the upper halves of the cross sections are shown. (b) The calculated correction to turgor pressure DP (see main text) for the DNA condensate in the cell as a function of genome length arising from the surface F surf and bending F bend free energies. where e is the solvent dielectric permittivity, and l is the effective linear charge density of the polyelectrolyte. The angle-dependent electrostatic excluded volume (second virial coefficient) is then calculated as (6,7) bðn 1 ; n Þ¼ 1 ZZ e U 1ðr 1 ;r Þ k B T 1 dr 1 dr ; (7) V which for the case of two charged rods of length L p at a closest separation of x ¼jr 1 r j evaluates to Z N bðn 1 ; n Þ¼L p 1 sin g e U 1 ðx;gþ k B T dx; (8) with D as the width of the DNA basepair. Based on the ambiguity in choosing the effective linear charge density attributable to correlations and screening, we opt to use an experimental fit that includes both hydration repulsion and screened electrostatic interactions between two parallel rods of DNA (8). We neglect the short-range hydration interactions and use only the electrostatic component of the fit D UðrÞ ¼b p e kr ffiffiffiffi: (9) kr We extend this potential to apply it to skewed rods following a scheme elaborated in Brenner and Parsegian (5) to obtain the angle-dependent potential rffiffiffi p Uðx; gþ ¼ b k e kx sin g : (10) From this, we calculate the angle-dependent excluded volume b(n 1, n ) with the value of b ¼ 85 k B T/nm for 100 mm added monovalent salt (8). The isotropic excluded volume v is obtained by integrating b(n 1, n ) over all possible angles for n 1 and n, assuming equal probability for finding them in any orientation. From v ¼ 1 ZZ bðn 1 ; n Þ 1 1 4p 4p du 1dU ; (11) we obtain the excluded volume of one DNA persistencelength segment (6) asv z L p DC 0, with D z.5 nm as the width of the DNA and C 0 z.87 as a constant depending on interaction specifics (100 mm monovalent salt concentration). A comparison with a viral capsid with R c ¼ 50 nm shows that v z V c /30; we see that 30 persistence-length segments of DNA are sufficient to exclude all the free volume, hinting at a large electrostatic intrastrand repulsion from confinement. The anisotropic excluded volume approximation is valid until the viral DNA transitions into a liquid crystal phase (6), which happens at roughly 30% packing (9) well beyond the encapsidated length for which the ejecting force is comparable to the opposing cellular force.

4 Ejecting Phage DNA against Cellular Turgor Pressure 197 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION We now study the balance of forces near the end of ejection so we can determine the maximal cellular turgor pressure that can be overcome. The crowded cellular interior exerts a turgor pressure P on the volume V of any foreign material to banish it from the cell (30) whereas the effect of condensation tries to draw more DNA into the condensate. The balance of free energy in the cell is thus F cell (L) ¼ (P g)a 0 (L 0 L), which is always negative if P < g. The DNA will tend to enter the cell despite the turgor pressure, due to the favorable condensation conditions. The value of g can be determined by fitting minimal toroid shapes to experimentally measured toroid parameters in the presence of condensing agents found in bacteria (15,3) (see previous section). Obtained estimates for g are between 4 and 6 atm, depending on the choice of model parameters. We take g z 4 atm for the turgor pressure that condensing agents in a cell could overcome on their own. Additional contributions, DP, come from unfavorable free energy contributions for DNA in the capsid F cap and corrections to surface and bending energy terms in the condensate (Fig. 1). The additional chemical potential for the DNA in the cell when the turgor pressure is increased by DP is DPA 0, and this should be matched by the chemical potential in the capsid to avoid the stalling of the ejection. When the two chemical potentials are equal, m ¼ vf cell vl ¼ DPA 0 ¼ vf cap vl ; (1) the ejection will stall at some length L*. From this we determine the maximal additional DP that can be overcome by the virus because the DNA is ejected from the cramped capsid. We now study effects due to the confinement in the capsid, which was the cause of the driving force in the early stage of ejection. Some bacteriophages have tails of considerable length t, so we examine whether they influence the ejection process. The entropic penalty for confining a semiflexible polymer in a tube of diameter w (31) is F tail k B T zt l ln L p l ; (13) where l ¼ w /3 L p 1/3 is the Odijk deflection length. For a tail with w z.75 nm (), the effective chemical potential from the tail is F tail /t z 0.7 k B T/nm. This is enough to oppose an additional 1.5 atm of turgor pressure in the cell and is independent of the length of the tail. However, the effect of the tail onsets only when the last DNA basepair exits the capsid and enters the tail (i.e., when L ¼ t). This suggests a barrier in the chemical potential that needs to be overcome for total ejection when 4 atm < P < 5.5 atm (as will be shown later). DNA is a charged polyelectrolyte with strong repulsive electrostatic interactions between any two points on its contour. Interactions between nearby parts of the contour act to give it its large persistence length comparable to the radius of the nearly spherical capsid L p ~ R c. When the DNA touches the capsid, any increase of length L will force the DNA to bend to conform to the shape of the capsid. The bending energy in such a situation can be approximated by that of a loop of DNA with radius R c, k B TL p /R c.a comparison with the previously neglected bending energy of the condensate (see Eq. 3) reveals that they are matched for R c z 50 nm according to the thin torus model (15). Smaller capsids could enhance the chemical potential; e.g., in the case of l-phage with R c z 30 nm (), the change of Dm z 0.03 k B T/nm is enough to compensate for z0.15 atm of turgor pressure. Any direct interactions between the DNA and capsid appear to be negligible; viral ejection experiments show no evidence of attractive forces (3), and because dsdna bacteriophage capsids have no considerable charge (33), only weak van der Waals interactions are possible. When the length of the DNA in the capsid is large enough, L >> L p, the DNA chain statistics resemble that of a random walk of n p ¼ L/L p persistence-length segments (34). This approximation is valid for steric interactions in bulk as long as L p % R c (35). In the case of strong spherical confinement and electrostatic interactions, the effective persistence length that governs correlations along the contour becomes as small as 10 nm (36), making the approach valid even in smaller capsids. The interaction energy between different parts of the DNA strand in confinement may be estimated on the basis of the excluded volume v between two segments (35). The corresponding Flory free energy of interaction in the capsid of volume V c is F v z k B Tn p v/v c. This contribution vanishes inasmuch as L / 0, so it cannot help the ejection in its latest stages. The excluded volume between two DNA segments can be approximated as that between two charged rods. This interaction is intrinsically anisotropic, but at low packing fractions (near the end of ejection) there is no order, and we can average this over all possible mutual angles between two cylinders (see Modeling the DNA). We obtain v ¼ L p DC 0, where D is the DNA diameter (D z.5 nm) and C 0 is a numeric constant. The excluded volume interactions will contribute to the total free energy as k B TC 0 DL /V c (but only in the regime when there are at least several persistence length segments inside the capsid). For R c z 50 nm in 100 mm monovalent salt, v/v c z 1/30, resulting in the effective chemical potential being an increasing function of length as vf v /vl z L/L p k B T/nm. If, say, 10 persistence lengths of DNA are in the capsid, the repulsive force is sufficient to oppose ~0.8 atm of turgor pressure. When the cellular turgor pressure P is larger than the effective condensing pressure g in the cell, the net driving pressure P g > 0 on the viral DNA will tend to repel it from the cell. When the net repulsive cellular pressure is smaller than the tail confinement penalty m tail ¼ F tail /t

5 198 Marion and Siber (corresponding to z1.5 atm), the DNA will be stuck in the virus; the tail of length t will be completely filled, and some length L t will reside inside the capsid. This stalling length is a result of all the repulsive interactions in the capsid canceling out with the net driving pressure in the cell. Note, however, that if the whole DNA from the capsid (of length L t) enters the tail, the additional asymmetry in the free energy of the two thermodynamic reservoirs onsets. This is due to the confinement penalty of the DNA in the tail. With a partially filled tail, the derivatives of the free energy per unit length (the chemical potential) in the virus (the DNA length increases in the virus) and in the cell (the DNA length increases in the cell) are not the same. The thermodynamical balance is thus broken, and the thermodynamical gradient necessary for the ejection is restored. Therefore, there exists a potential barrier that the DNA needs to overcome for its capsid-side end to enter the tail and be swiftly ejected. We now estimate whether the thermal fluctuations may overcome the free energy barrier. Because the capsid DNA is not condensed it is coupled to a solvent heat bath at temperature T. From the equipartition theorem, the encapsidated DNA will have ~1/ k B T thermal energy per degree of freedom. A semiflexible polymer of length L can be partitioned into a random walk of n p z L/L p steps with each step of length L p having two degrees of freedom (two angles) and the origin being at the tail entrance. The resulting DNA thermal energy is ~1 k B T/L p, or ~0.0 k B T/nm, which corresponds to a fluctuation in the maximal turgor pressure of ~0.1 atm. We can argue that the ejection can happen in a finite time if the barrier corresponds to up to, say, three standard deviations of ~0.3 atm. CONCLUSION We conclude that the mechanism of viral ejection from some dsdna bacteriophages into Gram-positive bacteria could be explained as a competition between the resisting turgor pressure and a free energy gain from condensation of the ejected part of the DNA. From the experimental data for the condensation energy of DNA, we estimate that a turgor pressure in excess of 4 atm can be overcome by unassisted ejection in line with recent moleculardynamics simulations (37). Our model does not exclude additional ejecting mechanisms such as the osmotic pressure from proteins remaining in the capsid (11) or pulling from proteins in the cell (1); such mechanisms can help to overcome even larger turgor pressures than obtained here. REFERENCES 1. Ponchon, L., S. Mangenot,., L. Letellier Encapsidation and transfer of phage DNA into host cells: from in vivo to single particles studies. Biochim. Biophys. Acta. 174: Molineux, I. J., and D. Panja Popping the cork: mechanisms of phage genome ejection. Nat. Rev. Microbiol. 11: Smith, D. E., S. J. Tans,., C. Bustamante The bacteriophage straight f9 portal motor can package DNA against a large internal force. Nature. 413: Siber, A., A. L. Bozic, and R. Podgornik. 01. Energies and pressures in viruses: contribution of nonspecific electrostatic interactions. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 14: Purohit, P. K., M. M. Inamdar,., R. Phillips Forces during bacteriophage DNA packaging and ejection. Biophys. J. 88: van Valen, D., D. Wu,., R. Phillips. 01. A single-molecule Hershey-Chase experiment. Curr. Biol. : Mangenot, S., M. Hochrein,., L. Letellier Real-time imaging of DNA ejection from single phage particles. Curr. Biol. 15: Kemp, P., M. Gupta, and I. J. Molineux Bacteriophage T7 DNA ejection into cells is initiated by an enzyme-like mechanism. Mol. Microbiol. 53: Molineux, I. J No syringes please, ejection of phage T7 DNA from the virion is enzyme driven. Mol. Microbiol. 40: Panja, D., and I. J. Molineux Dynamics of bacteriophage genome ejection in vitro and in vivo. Phys. Biol. 7: Grayson, P., and I. J. Molineux Is phage DNA injected into cells biologists and physicists can agree. Curr. Opin. Microbiol. 10: Inamdar, M. M., W. M. Gelbart, and R. Phillips Dynamics of DNA ejection from bacteriophage. Biophys. J. 91: Ubbink, J., and T. Odijk Polymer- and salt-induced toroids of hexagonal DNA. Biophys. J. 68: Ubbink, J., and T. Odijk Deformation of toroidal DNA condensates under surface stress. Europhys. Lett. 33: Tzlil, S., J. T. Kindt,., A. Ben-Shaul Forces and pressures in DNA packaging and release from viral capsids. Biophys. J. 84: Arnoldi, M., M. Fritz,., A. Boulbitch Bacterial turgor pressure can be measured by atomic force microscopy. Phys. Rev. E Stat. Phys. Plasmas Fluids Relat. Interdiscip. Topics. 6: São-José, C., M. de Frutos,., P. Tavares Pressure built by DNA packing inside virions: enough to drive DNA ejection in vitro, largely insufficient for delivery into the bacterial cytoplasm. J. Mol. Biol. 374: Deng, Y., M. Sun, and J. W. Shaevitz Direct measurement of cell wall stress stiffening and turgor pressure in live bacterial cells. Phys. Rev. Lett. 107: Zimmerman, S. B., and L. D. Murphy Macromolecular crowding and the mandatory condensation of DNA in bacteria. FEBS Lett. 390: Leforestier, A., A. Siber,., R. Podgornik Protein-DNA interactions determine the shapes of DNA toroids condensed in virus capsids. Biophys. J. 100: Köster, S., A. Evilevitch,., D. A. Weitz Influence of internal capsid pressure on viral infection by phage-l. Biophys. J. 97: R. Calendar, and S. T. Abedon, editors 006. The Bacteriophages, nd Ed. Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom. 3. Golan, R., L. I. Pietrasanta,., H. G. Hansma DNA toroids: stages in condensation. Biochemistry. 38: Rau, D. C., and V. A. Parsegian Direct measurement of the intermolecular forces between counterion-condensed DNA double helices. Evidence for long range attractive hydration forces. Biophys. J. 61: Brenner, S. L., and V. A. Parsegian A physical method for deriving the electrostatic interaction between rod-like polyions at all mutual angles. Biophys. J. 14: Odijk, T Theory of lyotropic polymer liquid crystals. Macromolecules. 19:

6 Ejecting Phage DNA against Cellular Turgor Pressure Onsager, L The effects of shape on the interaction of colloidal particles. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 51: Strey, H., V. Parsegian, and R. Podgornik Equation of state for DNA liquid crystals: fluctuation enhanced electrostatic double layer repulsion. Phys. Rev. Lett. 78: Leforestier, A Polymorphism of DNA conformation inside the bacteriophage capsid. J. Biol. Phys. 39: Castelnovo, M., R. K. Bowles,., W. M. Gelbart Osmotic force resisting chain insertion in a colloidal suspension. Eur. Phys. J. E Soft Matter. 10: Odijk, T On the statistics and dynamics of confined or entangled stiff polymers. Macromolecules. 16: Evilevitch, A., J. W. Gober,., W. M. Gelbart Measurements of DNA lengths remaining in a viral capsid after osmotically suppressed partial ejection. Biophys. J. 88: Losdorfer Bozic, A., A. Siber, and R. Podgornik. 01. How simple can a model of an empty viral capsid be? Charge distributions in viral capsids. J. Biol. Phys. 38: Khokhlov, A., and A. Semenov Liquid-crystalline ordering in the solution of long persistent chains. Phys. A. 108: Sakaue, T Semiflexible polymer confined in closed spaces. Macromolecules. 40: Cifra, P., Z. Benková, and T. Bleha Persistence lengths and structure factors of wormlike polymers under confinement. J. Phys. Chem. B. 11: Petrov, A. S., S. S. Douglas, and S. C. Harvey Effects of pulling forces, osmotic pressure, condensing agents and viscosity on the thermodynamics and kinetics of DNA ejection from bacteriophages to bacterial cells: a computational study. J. Phys. Condens. Matter. 5:

8.592J HST.452J: Statistical Physics in Biology

8.592J HST.452J: Statistical Physics in Biology Assignment # 4 8.592J HST.452J: Statistical Physics in Biology Coulomb Interactions 1. Flory Theory: The Coulomb energy of a ball of charge Q and dimension R in d spacial dimensions scales as Q 2 E c.

More information

V = 2ze 2 n. . a. i=1

V = 2ze 2 n. . a. i=1 IITS: Statistical Physics in Biology Assignment # 3 KU Leuven 5/29/2013 Coulomb Interactions & Polymers 1. Flory Theory: The Coulomb energy of a ball of charge Q and dimension R in d spacial dimensions

More information

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.soft] 11 Oct 2012

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.soft] 11 Oct 2012 Europhysics Letters PREPRINT arxiv:1210.3228v1 [cond-mat.soft] 11 Oct 2012 Confined chiral polymer nematics: ordering and spontaneous condensation Daniel Svenšek 1 and Rudolf Podgornik 1,2,3 1 Dept. of

More information

Confinement of polymer chains and gels

Confinement of polymer chains and gels Confinement of polymer chains and gels Nefeli Georgoulia - Student number: 70732831 1 Introduction Confinement of polymer chains is significant in industrial as well as biological applications. For this

More information

Protein-DNA Interactions Determine the Shapes of DNA Toroids Condensed in Virus Capsids

Protein-DNA Interactions Determine the Shapes of DNA Toroids Condensed in Virus Capsids Biophysical Journal Volume 100 May 2011 2209 2216 2209 Protein-DNA Interactions Determine the Shapes of DNA Toroids Condensed in Virus Capsids Amélie Leforestier, Antonio Siber, Françoise Livolant, and

More information

Flexible Polymer-Induced Condensation and Bundle Formation of DNA and F-Actin Filaments

Flexible Polymer-Induced Condensation and Bundle Formation of DNA and F-Actin Filaments 1186 Biophysical Journal Volume 80 March 2001 1186 1194 Flexible Polymer-Induced Condensation and Bundle Formation of DNA and F-Actin Filaments Renko de Vries Laboratory of Physical Chemistry and Colloid

More information

Untangling the Mechanics of Entangled Biopolymers

Untangling the Mechanics of Entangled Biopolymers Untangling the Mechanics of Entangled Biopolymers Rae M. Robertson-Anderson Physics Department University of San Diego students/postdocs: Cole Chapman, PhD Tobias Falzone, PhD Stephanie Gorczyca, USD 16

More information

Swelling and Collapse of Single Polymer Molecules and Gels.

Swelling and Collapse of Single Polymer Molecules and Gels. Swelling and Collapse of Single Polymer Molecules and Gels. Coil-Globule Transition in Single Polymer Molecules. the coil-globule transition If polymer chains are not ideal, interactions of non-neighboring

More information

Proteins polymer molecules, folded in complex structures. Konstantin Popov Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics

Proteins polymer molecules, folded in complex structures. Konstantin Popov Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics Proteins polymer molecules, folded in complex structures Konstantin Popov Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics Outline General aspects of polymer theory Size and persistent length of ideal linear

More information

Physics of DNA. R. Podgornik. Laboratory of Physical and Structural Biology. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Physics of DNA. R. Podgornik. Laboratory of Physical and Structural Biology. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Physics of DNA R. Podgornik Laboratory of Physical and Structural Biology National Institute of Child Health and Human Development National Institutes of Health Bethesda, MD - DNA as a polyelectrolyte

More information

Electrostatic Interactions in Mixtures of Cationic and Anionic Biomolecules: Bulk Structures and Induced Surface Pattern Formation

Electrostatic Interactions in Mixtures of Cationic and Anionic Biomolecules: Bulk Structures and Induced Surface Pattern Formation Electrostatic Interactions in Mixtures of Cationic and Anionic Biomolecules: Bulk Structures and Induced Surface Pattern Formation Monica Olvera de la Cruz F. J. Solis, P. Gonzalez- Mozuleos (theory) E.

More information

Macromolecular Crowding

Macromolecular Crowding Macromolecular Crowding Keng-Hwee Chiam Mathematical and Theoretical Biology Group Goodsell (1994) Macromolecular Crowding, Oct. 15, 2003 p.1/33 Outline What: introduction, definition Why: implications

More information

Protein DNA interactions determine the shapes of DNA toroids condensed in virus capsids

Protein DNA interactions determine the shapes of DNA toroids condensed in virus capsids Protein DNA interactions determine the shapes of DNA toroids condensed in virus capsids Amélie Leforestier *, Antonio Šiber, Françoise Livolant * and Rudolf Podgornik, * Laboratoire de Physique des Solides,

More information

Simple Simulations of DNA Condensation

Simple Simulations of DNA Condensation 130 Biophysical Journal Volume 80 January 2001 130 139 Simple Simulations of DNA Condensation Mark J. Stevens Sandia National Laboratory, P.O. Box 5800, MS 1111, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185 USA ABSTRACT

More information

Exchange of Counterions in DNA Condensation. Abstract

Exchange of Counterions in DNA Condensation. Abstract Exchange of Counterions in DNA Condensation Yoshihiro Murayama and Masaki Sano Department of Physics, University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-0033, Japan Abstract We measured the fluorescence intensity of DNA-bound

More information

Electrostatics and the assembly of an RNA virus

Electrostatics and the assembly of an RNA virus Electrostatics and the assembly of an RNA virus Citation for published version (APA): Schoot, van der, P. P. A. M., & Bruinsma, R. (2005). Electrostatics and the assembly of an RNA virus. Physical Review

More information

Final exam. Please write your name on the exam and keep an ID card ready. You may use a calculator (but no computer or smart phone) and a dictionary.

Final exam. Please write your name on the exam and keep an ID card ready. You may use a calculator (but no computer or smart phone) and a dictionary. Biophysics of Macromolecules Prof. D. Braun and Prof. J. Lipfert SS 2015 Final exam Final exam Name: Student number ( Matrikelnummer ): Please write your name on the exam and keep an ID card ready. You

More information

Advances in nanofabrication have made it possible to

Advances in nanofabrication have made it possible to pubs.acs.org/macroletters Conformation Model of Back-Folding and Looping of a Single DNA Molecule Confined Inside a Nanochannel Liang Dai,, Siow Yee Ng,, Patrick S. Doyle,, and Johan R. C. van der Maarel*,,

More information

arxiv:cond-mat/ v1 [cond-mat.soft] 9 Aug 1997

arxiv:cond-mat/ v1 [cond-mat.soft] 9 Aug 1997 Depletion forces between two spheres in a rod solution. K. Yaman, C. Jeppesen, C. M. Marques arxiv:cond-mat/9708069v1 [cond-mat.soft] 9 Aug 1997 Department of Physics, U.C.S.B., CA 93106 9530, U.S.A. Materials

More information

Grand-canonical simulation of DNA condensation with two salts, effect of divalent counterion size

Grand-canonical simulation of DNA condensation with two salts, effect of divalent counterion size Grand-canonical simulation of DNA condensation with two salts, effect of divalent counterion size Toan T. Nguyen 1,2 1 Faculty of Physics, Hanoi University of Science, Vietnam National University, 334

More information

Chemical Potential. Combining the First and Second Laws for a closed system, Considering (extensive properties)

Chemical Potential. Combining the First and Second Laws for a closed system, Considering (extensive properties) Chemical Potential Combining the First and Second Laws for a closed system, Considering (extensive properties) du = TdS pdv Hence For an open system, that is, one that can gain or lose mass, U will also

More information

Physics 562: Statistical Mechanics Spring 2002, James P. Sethna Prelim, due Wednesday, March 13 Latest revision: March 22, 2002, 10:9

Physics 562: Statistical Mechanics Spring 2002, James P. Sethna Prelim, due Wednesday, March 13 Latest revision: March 22, 2002, 10:9 Physics 562: Statistical Mechanics Spring 2002, James P. Sethna Prelim, due Wednesday, March 13 Latest revision: March 22, 2002, 10:9 Open Book Exam Work on your own for this exam. You may consult your

More information

Electrostatic correlations and fluctuations for ion binding to a finite length polyelectrolyte

Electrostatic correlations and fluctuations for ion binding to a finite length polyelectrolyte THE JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS 122, 044903 2005 Electrostatic correlations and fluctuations for ion binding to a finite length polyelectrolyte Zhi-Jie Tan and Shi-Jie Chen a) Department of Physics and

More information

Molecular attractions:

Molecular attractions: Molecular attractions: a.) van der Waals interactions b.) electrostatic correlation interactions c.) polyelectrolyte bridging interactions Rudi Podgornik Laboratory of Physical and Structural Biology National

More information

Interactions of Flexible Macromolecules with Surfaces and Their Role in Viral Assembly

Interactions of Flexible Macromolecules with Surfaces and Their Role in Viral Assembly Interactions of Flexible Macromolecules with Surfaces and Their Role in Viral Assembly Thesis Submitted for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy by Shelly Tzlil Submitted to the Hebrew University Senate December

More information

DNA Condensation. Matej Marin Advisor: prof. Rudi Podgornik. 4th April 2002

DNA Condensation. Matej Marin Advisor: prof. Rudi Podgornik. 4th April 2002 DNA Condensation Matej Marin Advisor: prof. Rudi Podgornik 4th April 2002 Abstract Recent studies of DNA condensation are reviewed. First, dierent intrachain interactions (based on DNA - DNA interactions

More information

SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS - Here's a brief review of the atomic picture or gases, liquids, and solids GASES

SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS - Here's a brief review of the atomic picture or gases, liquids, and solids GASES 30 SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS - Here's a brief review of the atomic picture or gases, liquids, and solids GASES * Gas molecules are small compared to the space between them. * Gas molecules move in straight lines

More information

Soft Matter and Biological Physics

Soft Matter and Biological Physics Dr. Ulrich F. Keyser - ufk20 (at) cam.ac.uk Soft Matter and Biological Physics Question Sheet Michaelmas 2011 Version: November 2, 2011 Question 0: Sedimentation Initially consider identical small particles

More information

Experimental Soft Matter (M. Durand, G. Foffi)

Experimental Soft Matter (M. Durand, G. Foffi) Master 2 PCS/PTSC 2016-2017 10/01/2017 Experimental Soft Matter (M. Durand, G. Foffi) Nota Bene Exam duration : 3H ecture notes are not allowed. Electronic devices (including cell phones) are prohibited,

More information

Attraction or repulsion between charged colloids? A connection with Debye Hückel theory

Attraction or repulsion between charged colloids? A connection with Debye Hückel theory J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 12 (2000) A263 A267. Printed in the UK PII: S0953-8984(00)07724-9 Attraction or repulsion between charged colloids? A connection with Debye Hückel theory René van Roij H H Wills

More information

*blood and bones contain colloids. *milk is a good example of a colloidal dispersion.

*blood and bones contain colloids. *milk is a good example of a colloidal dispersion. Chap. 3. Colloids 3.1. Introduction - Simple definition of a colloid: a macroscopically heterogeneous system where one component has dimensions in between molecules and macroscopic particles like sand

More information

CHEMISTRY Matter and Change. Chapter 12: States of Matter

CHEMISTRY Matter and Change. Chapter 12: States of Matter CHEMISTRY Matter and Change Chapter 12: States of Matter CHAPTER 12 States of Matter Section 12.1 Section 12.2 Section 12.3 Section 12.4 Gases Forces of Attraction Liquids and Solids Phase Changes Click

More information

Chiral selection in wrapping, crossover, and braiding of DNA mediated by asymmetric bend-writhe elasticity

Chiral selection in wrapping, crossover, and braiding of DNA mediated by asymmetric bend-writhe elasticity http://www.aimspress.com/ AIMS Biophysics, 2(4): 666-694. DOI: 10.3934/biophy.2015.4.666 Received date 28 August 2015, Accepted date 29 October 2015, Published date 06 November 2015 Research article Chiral

More information

Lecture 4: viscoelasticity and cell mechanics

Lecture 4: viscoelasticity and cell mechanics Teaser movie: flexible robots! R. Shepherd, Whitesides group, Harvard 1 Lecture 4: viscoelasticity and cell mechanics S-RSI Physics Lectures: Soft Condensed Matter Physics Jacinta C. Conrad University

More information

PHASE TRANSITIONS IN SOFT MATTER SYSTEMS

PHASE TRANSITIONS IN SOFT MATTER SYSTEMS OUTLINE: Topic D. PHASE TRANSITIONS IN SOFT MATTER SYSTEMS Definition of a phase Classification of phase transitions Thermodynamics of mixing (gases, polymers, etc.) Mean-field approaches in the spirit

More information

Chap. 2. Polymers Introduction. - Polymers: synthetic materials <--> natural materials

Chap. 2. Polymers Introduction. - Polymers: synthetic materials <--> natural materials Chap. 2. Polymers 2.1. Introduction - Polymers: synthetic materials natural materials no gas phase, not simple liquid (much more viscous), not perfectly crystalline, etc 2.3. Polymer Chain Conformation

More information

Kinetic Theory (Kinetikos - Moving ) Based on the idea that particles of matter are always in motion

Kinetic Theory (Kinetikos - Moving ) Based on the idea that particles of matter are always in motion Chapter 10 Kinetic Theory (Kinetikos - Moving ) Based on the idea that particles of matter are always in motion The motion has consequences Behavior of Gases Physical Properties of Gases Ideal Gas an imaginary

More information

Effects of interaction between nanopore and polymer on translocation time

Effects of interaction between nanopore and polymer on translocation time Effects of interaction between nanopore and polymer on translocation time Mohammadreza Niknam Hamidabad and Rouhollah Haji Abdolvahab Physics Department, Iran University of Science and Technology (IUST),

More information

Statistical Thermodynamics Exercise 11 HS Exercise 11

Statistical Thermodynamics Exercise 11 HS Exercise 11 Exercise 11 Release: 412215 on-line Return: 1112215 your assistant Discussion: 1512215 your tutorial room Macromolecules (or polymers) are large molecules consisting of smaller subunits (referred to as

More information

2 Structure. 2.1 Coulomb interactions

2 Structure. 2.1 Coulomb interactions 2 Structure 2.1 Coulomb interactions While the information needed for reproduction of living systems is chiefly maintained in the sequence of macromolecules, any practical use of this information must

More information

SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS - Here's a brief review of the atomic picture or gases, liquids, and solids GASES

SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS - Here's a brief review of the atomic picture or gases, liquids, and solids GASES 30 SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS - Here's a brief review of the atomic picture or gases, liquids, and solids GASES * Gas molecules are small compared to the space between them. * Gas molecules move in straight lines

More information

DNA supercoiling: plectonemes or curls?

DNA supercoiling: plectonemes or curls? DNA supercoiling: plectonemes or curls? Sébastien Neukirch CNRS & UPMC Univ. Paris 6 (France) John F. Marko Northwestern University (IL. USA) Why study DNA mechanical properties? mechanical properties

More information

Molecular attractions:

Molecular attractions: Molecular attractions: a.) van der Waals interactions b.) electrostatic correlation interactions c.) polyelectrolyte bridging interactions Rudi Podgornik Laboratory of Physical and Structural Biology National

More information

CHAPTER 10. States of Matter

CHAPTER 10. States of Matter CHAPTER 10 States of Matter Kinetic Molecular Theory Kinetikos - Moving Based on the idea that particles of matter are always in motion The motion has consequences Explains the behavior of Gases, Liquids,

More information

CHAPTER 10. Kinetic Molecular Theory. Five Assumptions of the KMT. Atmospheric Pressure

CHAPTER 10. Kinetic Molecular Theory. Five Assumptions of the KMT. Atmospheric Pressure Kinetic Molecular Theory CHAPTER 10 States of Matter Kinetikos - Moving Based on the idea that particles of matter are always in motion The motion has consequences Explains the behavior of Gases, Liquids,

More information

Liquid crystal phase transitions in dispersions of rod-like colloidal particles

Liquid crystal phase transitions in dispersions of rod-like colloidal particles J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 8 (1996) 9451 9456. Printed in the UK Liquid crystal phase transitions in dispersions of rod-like colloidal particles M P B van Bruggen, F M van der Kooij and HNWLekkerkerker

More information

Toroidal Condensates of Semiflexible Polymers in Poor Solvents: Adsorption, Stretching, and Compression

Toroidal Condensates of Semiflexible Polymers in Poor Solvents: Adsorption, Stretching, and Compression Biophysical Journal Volume 80 January 2001 161 168 161 Toroidal Condensates of Semiflexible Polymers in Poor Solvents: Adsorption, Stretching, and Compression G. G. Pereira* and D. R. M. Williams* *Department

More information

Equilibrium self-assembly of small RNA viruses

Equilibrium self-assembly of small RNA viruses Equilibrium self-assembly of small RNA viruses R. F. Bruinsma 1,2, M. Comas-Garcia 3, R. F. Garmann 4, A. Y. Grosberg 5 1 Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Los Angeles, CA

More information

Lines of Renormalization Group Fixed Points for Fluid and Crystalline Membranes.

Lines of Renormalization Group Fixed Points for Fluid and Crystalline Membranes. EUROPHYSICS LETTERS 1 October 1988 Europhys. Lett., 7 (3), pp. 255-261 (1988) Lines of Renormalization Group Fixed Points for Fluid and Crystalline Membranes. R. LIPOWSKY Institut für Festkörperforschung

More information

Chapter 10. Lesson Starter. Why did you not smell the odor of the vapor immediately? Explain this event in terms of the motion of molecules.

Chapter 10. Lesson Starter. Why did you not smell the odor of the vapor immediately? Explain this event in terms of the motion of molecules. Preview Lesson Starter Objectives The Kinetic-Molecular Theory of Gases The Kinetic-Molecular Theory and the Nature of Gases Deviations of Real Gases from Ideal Behavior Section 1 The Kinetic-Molecular

More information

Final Morphology of Complex Materials

Final Morphology of Complex Materials 120314 Final Morphology of Complex Materials 1) Proteins are the prototypical model for hierarchy. a) Give the generic chemical structure for an amino acid and a protein molecule (a tripeptide). b) Label

More information

Problem Set No. 4 Due: Monday, 11/18/10 at the start of class

Problem Set No. 4 Due: Monday, 11/18/10 at the start of class Department of Chemical Engineering ChE 170 University of California, Santa Barbara Fall 2010 Problem Set No. 4 Due: Monday, 11/18/10 at the start of class Objective: To understand the thermodynamic and

More information

SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS - Here's a brief review of the atomic picture or gases, liquids, and solids GASES

SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS - Here's a brief review of the atomic picture or gases, liquids, and solids GASES 30 SOLIDS AND LIQUIDS - Here's a brief review of the atomic picture or gases, liquids, and solids GASES * Gas molecules are small compared to the space between them. * Gas molecules move in straight lines

More information

Chapter 13 States of Matter Forces of Attraction 13.3 Liquids and Solids 13.4 Phase Changes

Chapter 13 States of Matter Forces of Attraction 13.3 Liquids and Solids 13.4 Phase Changes Chapter 13 States of Matter 13.2 Forces of Attraction 13.3 Liquids and Solids 13.4 Phase Changes I. Forces of Attraction (13.2) Intramolecular forces? (forces within) Covalent Bonds, Ionic Bonds, and metallic

More information

Many proteins spontaneously refold into native form in vitro with high fidelity and high speed.

Many proteins spontaneously refold into native form in vitro with high fidelity and high speed. Macromolecular Processes 20. Protein Folding Composed of 50 500 amino acids linked in 1D sequence by the polypeptide backbone The amino acid physical and chemical properties of the 20 amino acids dictate

More information

Molecular Driving Forces

Molecular Driving Forces Molecular Driving Forces Statistical Thermodynamics in Chemistry and Biology SUBGfittingen 7 At 216 513 073 / / Ken A. Dill Sarina Bromberg With the assistance of Dirk Stigter on the Electrostatics chapters

More information

Lecture 3 Charged interfaces

Lecture 3 Charged interfaces Lecture 3 Charged interfaces rigin of Surface Charge Immersion of some materials in an electrolyte solution. Two mechanisms can operate. (1) Dissociation of surface sites. H H H H H M M M +H () Adsorption

More information

Nanomechanical Forces Generated by Surface Grafted DNA

Nanomechanical Forces Generated by Surface Grafted DNA J. Phys. Chem. B 2002, 106, 10163-10173 10163 Nanomechanical Forces Generated by Surface Grafted DNA Michael F. Hagan,, Arun Majumdar,, and Arup K. Chakraborty*,,,, Department of Chemical Engineering,

More information

Lecture 2 and 3: Review of forces (ctd.) and elementary statistical mechanics. Contributions to protein stability

Lecture 2 and 3: Review of forces (ctd.) and elementary statistical mechanics. Contributions to protein stability Lecture 2 and 3: Review of forces (ctd.) and elementary statistical mechanics. Contributions to protein stability Part I. Review of forces Covalent bonds Non-covalent Interactions: Van der Waals Interactions

More information

Chemistry C : Polymers Section. Dr. Edie Sevick, Research School of Chemistry, ANU. 3.0 The size of chains in good and poor solvent conditions

Chemistry C : Polymers Section. Dr. Edie Sevick, Research School of Chemistry, ANU. 3.0 The size of chains in good and poor solvent conditions Chemistry C3102-2006: Polymers Section Dr. Edie Sevick, Research School of Chemistry, ANU 3.0 The size of chains in good and poor solvent conditions Obviously, the ideal chain is a simple, first approximate

More information

Colloidal Suspension Rheology Chapter 1 Study Questions

Colloidal Suspension Rheology Chapter 1 Study Questions Colloidal Suspension Rheology Chapter 1 Study Questions 1. What forces act on a single colloidal particle suspended in a flowing fluid? Discuss the dependence of these forces on particle radius. 2. What

More information

Brownian Dynamics Simulation of DNA Condensation

Brownian Dynamics Simulation of DNA Condensation 1858 Biophysical Journal Volume 77 October 1999 1858 1870 Brownian Dynamics Simulation of DNA Condensation Pierre-Edouard Sottas, Eric Larquet, Andrzej Stasiak, and Jacques Dubochet Laboratoire d Analyse

More information

- intermolecular forces forces that exist between molecules

- intermolecular forces forces that exist between molecules Chapter 11: Intermolecular Forces, Liquids, and Solids - intermolecular forces forces that exist between molecules 11.1 A Molecular Comparison of Liquids and Solids - gases - average kinetic energy of

More information

Closely packed objects are ubiquitous in nature. Actual examples

Closely packed objects are ubiquitous in nature. Actual examples A statistical approach to close packing of elastic rods and to DNA packaging in viral capsids E. Katzav*, M. Adda-Bedia, and A. Boudaoud *aboratoire de Physique Théorique and aboratoire de Physique Statistique,

More information

= (-22) = +2kJ /mol

= (-22) = +2kJ /mol Lecture 8: Thermodynamics & Protein Stability Assigned reading in Campbell: Chapter 4.4-4.6 Key Terms: DG = -RT lnk eq = DH - TDS Transition Curve, Melting Curve, Tm DH calculation DS calculation van der

More information

A FIELD THEORETIC APPROACH TO THE ELECTRIC INTERFACIAL LAYER. MIXTURE OF TRIVALENT ROD-LIKE AND MONOVALENT POINT-LIKE IONS BETWEEN CHARGED WALLS.

A FIELD THEORETIC APPROACH TO THE ELECTRIC INTERFACIAL LAYER. MIXTURE OF TRIVALENT ROD-LIKE AND MONOVALENT POINT-LIKE IONS BETWEEN CHARGED WALLS. Modern Physics Letters B c World Scientific Publishing Company A FIELD THEORETIC APPROACH TO THE ELECTRIC INTERFACIAL LAYER. MIXTURE OF TRIVALENT ROD-LIKE AND MONOVALENT POINT-LIKE IONS BETWEEN CHARGED

More information

Cavity QED induced colloidal attraction?

Cavity QED induced colloidal attraction? Cavity QED induced colloidal attraction? T. V. Prevenslik 14B, Brilliance Court, Discovery Bay, Hong Kong Abstract - The paradox of why like-charge macroions having weak van der Waals attraction condense

More information

arxiv:cond-mat/ v1 2 Feb 94

arxiv:cond-mat/ v1 2 Feb 94 cond-mat/9402010 Properties and Origins of Protein Secondary Structure Nicholas D. Socci (1), William S. Bialek (2), and José Nelson Onuchic (1) (1) Department of Physics, University of California at San

More information

The effect of surface dipoles and of the field generated by a polarization gradient on the repulsive force

The effect of surface dipoles and of the field generated by a polarization gradient on the repulsive force Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 263 (2003) 156 161 www.elsevier.com/locate/jcis The effect of surface dipoles and of the field generated by a polarization gradient on the repulsive force Haohao

More information

Proteins in solution: charge-tuning, cluster formation, liquid-liquid phase separation, and crystallization

Proteins in solution: charge-tuning, cluster formation, liquid-liquid phase separation, and crystallization HERCULES Specialized Course: Non-atomic resolution scattering in biology and soft matter Grenoble, September 14-19, 2014 Proteins in solution: charge-tuning, cluster formation, liquid-liquid phase separation,

More information

arxiv: v1 [q-bio.bm] 6 Apr 2016

arxiv: v1 [q-bio.bm] 6 Apr 2016 Multi-shell model of ion-induced nucleic acid condensation Igor S. Tolokh Department of Computer Science, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA Aleksander Drozdetski Department of Physics, Virginia

More information

Coil to Globule Transition: This follows Giant Molecules by Alexander Yu. Grosberg and Alexei R. Khokhlov (1997).

Coil to Globule Transition: This follows Giant Molecules by Alexander Yu. Grosberg and Alexei R. Khokhlov (1997). Coil to Globule Transition: This follows Giant Molecules by Alexander Yu. Grosberg and Alexei R. Khokhlov (1997). The Flory Krigbaum expression for the free energy of a self-avoiding chain is given by,

More information

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.soft] 2 Dec 2017

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.soft] 2 Dec 2017 A Liquid Crystal Model of Viral DNA Encapsidation Javier Arsuaga, Maria Carme Calderer, Lindsey Hiltner and Mariel Vázquez (Dated: May 23, 2018) A liquid crystal continuum modeling framework for icosahedra

More information

Chapter 19. Gene creatures, Part 1: viruses, viroids and plasmids. Prepared by Woojoo Choi

Chapter 19. Gene creatures, Part 1: viruses, viroids and plasmids. Prepared by Woojoo Choi Chapter 19. Gene creatures, Part 1: viruses, viroids and plasmids Prepared by Woojoo Choi Dead or alive? 1) In this chapter we will explore the twilight zone of biology and the gene creature who live there.

More information

Effect of protein shape on multibody interactions between membrane inclusions

Effect of protein shape on multibody interactions between membrane inclusions PHYSICAL REVIEW E VOLUME 61, NUMBER 4 APRIL 000 Effect of protein shape on multibody interactions between membrane inclusions K. S. Kim, 1, * John Neu, and George Oster 3, 1 Department of Physics, Graduate

More information

Origin of the Electrophoretic Force on DNA in Nanopores. Biological and Soft Systems - Cavendish Laboratory

Origin of the Electrophoretic Force on DNA in Nanopores. Biological and Soft Systems - Cavendish Laboratory Origin of the Electrophoretic Force on DNA in Nanopores Ulrich F. Keyser Biological and Soft Systems - Cavendish Laboratory Acknowledgements Delft Cees Dekker, Nynke H. Dekker, Serge G. Lemay R. Smeets,

More information

Statistical mechanics of biological processes

Statistical mechanics of biological processes Statistical mechanics of biological processes 1 Modeling biological processes Describing biological processes requires models. If reaction occurs on timescales much faster than that of connected processes

More information

SECOND PUBLIC EXAMINATION. Honour School of Physics Part C: 4 Year Course. Honour School of Physics and Philosophy Part C C7: BIOLOGICAL PHYSICS

SECOND PUBLIC EXAMINATION. Honour School of Physics Part C: 4 Year Course. Honour School of Physics and Philosophy Part C C7: BIOLOGICAL PHYSICS 2757 SECOND PUBLIC EXAMINATION Honour School of Physics Part C: 4 Year Course Honour School of Physics and Philosophy Part C C7: BIOLOGICAL PHYSICS TRINITY TERM 2013 Monday, 17 June, 2.30 pm 5.45 pm 15

More information

Single molecule force spectroscopy reveals a highly compliant helical

Single molecule force spectroscopy reveals a highly compliant helical Supplementary Information Single molecule force spectroscopy reveals a highly compliant helical folding for the 30 nm chromatin fiber Maarten Kruithof, Fan-Tso Chien, Andrew Routh, Colin Logie, Daniela

More information

Equation of state for polymer liquid crystals: Theory and experiment

Equation of state for polymer liquid crystals: Theory and experiment PHYSICAL REVIEW E VOLUME 59, NUMBER 1 JANUARY 1999 Equation of state for polymer liquid crystals: Theory and experiment H. H. Strey, * V. A. Parsegian, and R. Podgornik National Institutes of Health, National

More information

Long-range many-body polyelectrolyte bridging interactions

Long-range many-body polyelectrolyte bridging interactions THE JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS 122, 204902 2005 Long-range many-body polyelectrolyte bridging interactions Rudi Podgornik a Department of Physics, University of Ljubljana, Jadranska 19, 1000 Ljubljana,

More information

The existence of distinct states of DNA compaction is vital to

The existence of distinct states of DNA compaction is vital to DNA condensation in two dimensions Ilya Koltover, Kathrin Wagner, and Cyrus R. Safinya Materials Department, Physics Department, and Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Program, University of California,

More information

CENG 5210 Advanced Separation Processes. Reverse osmosis

CENG 5210 Advanced Separation Processes. Reverse osmosis Reverse osmosis CENG 510 Advanced Separation Processes In osmosis, solvent transports from a dilute solute or salt solution to a concentrated solute or salt solution across a semipermeable membrane hich

More information

Physical aspects in the self-assembly of biological complexes

Physical aspects in the self-assembly of biological complexes Physical aspects in the self-assembly of biological complexes Bogdan Dragnea Chemistry Department Indiana University Bloomington IN 47405 dragnea@indiana.edu Self-assembling supra-molecular systems Example

More information

Physics of RecA-mediated homologous recognition

Physics of RecA-mediated homologous recognition Submitted to: Biophysical Journal, Jan. 05, 004 Physics of RecA-mediated homologous recognition Kevin Klapstein, 1 Tom Chou, 1 and Robijn Bruinsma 1 Dept. of Biomathematics, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1766

More information

Configurations of confined nematic polymers

Configurations of confined nematic polymers SEMINAR 1 1 st YEAR, SECOND CYCLE DEGREE Configurations of confined nematic polymers Author: Danijel Vidaković Mentor: Daniel Svenšek Ljubljana, March 2018 Abstract In this seminar, I present the construction

More information

CHAPTER 13. States of Matter. Kinetic = motion. Polar vs. Nonpolar. Gases. Hon Chem 13.notebook

CHAPTER 13. States of Matter. Kinetic = motion. Polar vs. Nonpolar. Gases. Hon Chem 13.notebook CHAPTER 13 States of Matter States that the tiny particles in all forms of matter are in constant motion. Kinetic = motion A gas is composed of particles, usually molecules or atoms, with negligible volume

More information

CHEM Principles of Chemistry II Chapter 10 - Liquids and Solids

CHEM Principles of Chemistry II Chapter 10 - Liquids and Solids CHEM 1212 - Principles of Chemistry II Chapter 10 - Liquids and Solids 10.1 Intermolecular Forces recall intramolecular (within the molecule) bonding whereby atoms can form stable units called molecules

More information

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.soft] 3 Feb 2011

arxiv: v1 [cond-mat.soft] 3 Feb 2011 Jamming of hard rods I: From Onsager to Edwards Maximilien Danisch 1,2, Adrian Baule 2, and Hernan A. Makse 2 1 Physics Department, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Cachan, 61 Avenue du President Wilson, 94235

More information

Stability of colloidal systems

Stability of colloidal systems Stability of colloidal systems Colloidal stability DLVO theory Electric double layer in colloidal systems Processes to induce charges at surfaces Key parameters for electric forces (ζ-potential, Debye

More information

Colloidal Crystal: emergence of long range order from colloidal fluid

Colloidal Crystal: emergence of long range order from colloidal fluid Colloidal Crystal: emergence of long range order from colloidal fluid Lanfang Li December 19, 2008 Abstract Although emergence, or spontaneous symmetry breaking, has been a topic of discussion in physics

More information

Colloids as nucleons

Colloids as nucleons Colloids as nucleons Willem Kegel & Jan Groenewold Van t Hoff Laboratory Utrecht University The Netherlands Finite-size equilibrium structures macroscopic phase separation Equilibrium clusters & periodic

More information

Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces

Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces 83 (2011) 61 68 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/colsurfb DNA condensations

More information

Fundamental Principles to Tutorials. Lecture 3: Introduction to Electrostatics in Salty Solution. Giuseppe Milano

Fundamental Principles to Tutorials. Lecture 3: Introduction to Electrostatics in Salty Solution. Giuseppe Milano III Advanced School on Biomolecular Simulation: Fundamental Principles to Tutorials Multiscale Methods from Lecture 3: Introduction to Electrostatics in Salty Solution Giuseppe Milano Reference Rob Phillips,

More information

Chapters 11 and 12: Intermolecular Forces of Liquids and Solids

Chapters 11 and 12: Intermolecular Forces of Liquids and Solids 1 Chapters 11 and 12: Intermolecular Forces of Liquids and Solids 11.1 A Molecular Comparison of Liquids and Solids The state of matter (Gas, liquid or solid) at a particular temperature and pressure depends

More information

INTERMOLECULAR AND SURFACE FORCES

INTERMOLECULAR AND SURFACE FORCES INTERMOLECULAR AND SURFACE FORCES SECOND EDITION JACOB N. ISRAELACHVILI Department of Chemical & Nuclear Engineering and Materials Department University of California, Santa Barbara California, USA ACADEMIC

More information

ENAS 606 : Polymer Physics

ENAS 606 : Polymer Physics ENAS 606 : Polymer Physics Professor Description Course Topics TA Prerequisite Class Office Hours Chinedum Osuji 302 Mason Lab, 432-4357, chinedum.osuji@yale.edu This course covers the static and dynamic

More information

GEM4 Summer School OpenCourseWare

GEM4 Summer School OpenCourseWare GEM4 Summer School OpenCourseWare http://gem4.educommons.net/ http://www.gem4.org/ Lecture: Polymer Chains by Ju Li. Given August 16, 2006 during the GEM4 session at MIT in Cambridge, MA. Please use the

More information

- As for the liquids, the properties of different solids often differ considerably. Compare a sample of candle wax to a sample of quartz.

- As for the liquids, the properties of different solids often differ considerably. Compare a sample of candle wax to a sample of quartz. 32 SOLIDS * Molecules are usually packed closer together in the solid phase than in the gas or liquid phases. * Molecules are not free to move around each other as in the liquid phase. Molecular/atomic

More information

Intermediate Physics PHYS102

Intermediate Physics PHYS102 Intermediate Physics PHYS102 Dr Richard H. Cyburt Assistant Professor of Physics My office: 402c in the Science Building My phone: (304) 384-6006 My email: rcyburt@concord.edu My webpage: www.concord.edu/rcyburt

More information